CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Lt. Gov. Mary Taylor lagged in fundraising and cash on hand with the other three Republican candidates for governor, leaving her far behind in terms of fundraising totals.

Taylor was able to bring in about $640,000 in contributions and a further $76,000 in in-kind contributions. After $200,000 in expenses, she'll enter August with a little more than $436,000 in the bank.

That's about 10 times less than any other candidate in the race after massive fundraising totals from Secretary of State Jon Husted and large personal loans from Attorney General Mike DeWine and U.S. Rep. Jim Renacci.

"I am all in and in it to win," Taylor said. "Today's campaign finance report tells me that Ohioans who want to see a candidate with vision, energy and ability and who can win next November are in it with me."

Taylor is Republican Gov. John Kasich's preferred candidate, and the governor is still mostly popular in the state. A recent poll from Morning Consult ranked him as the 20th most popular governor in America, with an approval rating of 57 percent.

But Kasich has also publicly bucked Republican President Donald Trump, and Trump is the leader of the party. The Morning Consult poll did not break down Kasich's popularity by party.

Taylor also made a questionable decision to skip the Ohio Republican Party's state dinner to take a trip with her son. The room in Columbus was chock full of potential donors who instead of hearing her speak like the other candidates only saw a prepared video.

She's matched up against three well-funded candidates. Husted raked in more than $2 million in individual contributions. DeWine raised about $1.2 million in individual contributions and loaned another $1 million of his own money.

Taylor did beat Renacci in individual contributions, but the wealthy Renacci loaned himself $4 million of his own money to put him in the same league as DeWine and Husted.

You can find all of cleveland.com's coverage of the campaign finance filing deadline here.